E 477 .67 .D41 Copy 1 «• J ^ THE LAST TEN D/VYS SERVICE OF THE OLD THIRD CORPS ("as wk understand it") WITH THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC* Address delivered after the Anniversary Dinner of the Third Corps Union, 5th May, 1887, at the Hotel Windsor, New York. The distinguished career of the "Old Third Corps, as we understand it," lias been quite thoroughly developed from year to year before this Union, -with the exception of the concluding Ten Days, in which it played as usual a prominent part, at first immediately under Maj.-Gen. Gershom Mott, and finally under ■ then Brig.-Gen. (afterwards Maj.-Gen.) Regis de Trobriand, as the Third Division of the combined Second-Third Corps, of which Maj.-Gen. A. A. Humphreys was commander (see Note I). In the course of these ten days tliere was a great deal of sharp fighting done, if not the heavy fighting such as troops are generally supposed to do in a regular pitched battle. The motto most appropriate to a soldier is, "to fight and to suft'er," and the suffering part is in almost every case at least twenty out of twenty-one ; often for more. The fiunous Kleber used to say, " Soldiers ! to make war is to be Inuigry and thirsty, it is to suffer and to die, it is to obey." Very hard lines, sad but true. Men of the Old Third Corps, you have proved the truth of this. Suffering, or "sufterance is the badge of all our tribe" are the words of Shakspeare, and the famous Marquis d'Azeglio, towards the end of his life, summed up his experience with the dictum that, " if nothing else was certain, suffering was inevitably the . lot of every mortal." It is surely the lot of every soldier, and the amount of suffering crowded into the last ten days of the active service of the Army of the Potomac was unusually se- * For a critical consideration of the operations of these Ten Days, see " Personal Memoirs of U S. Grant, versus the Record of the Army of the Potomac," by Lieut. -Col. Carswell McClellan, A. A. G., &c., &c., on the staff of Gen. A. A. Humphreys. Boston and New York : 1887. This work entirely corroborates the views taken by Gen. J. W. de P. ^^^ >' \\ 2 ana everything ^vl>ic\> vere-fbvced marches, ^l-'\;.f ":^, 'r that U- .^n .-re On Ac 2«tW of Maixl., l^O' ; '^" ;, ,i„. The solders Co,T» 1^* ■■^' «»'"''• "°' "Zo make a movement ul..ch » ° ,nea .o feel tl-at tl.ev we.e al on ^^^ ^ ^.^^^ ^^ „,. ,„ '; "; ;rr p=; ""■-• -ill- --•'•" Army ot tne 1 ^f the supreme tiuimp"- ,MTia ;:irai:aayua„n.ea-.l.as^^^^^^^^^^^ thitbev, near Bmgess M , ^ ^^ ^,,,,0 Diamond Baage. J^- ,„a won anothersuclr a » m<^- ^,^^ engagements of the „.hoWore it will over fo, get the ^^ February, 1865, 4,h of Oetoher, 1804, and of ^ - ;^'„ ^^.^i^, t„. Corps i; own as the "First and S«"-\^ '^'^^^^^t^red. The ensnn.g tasooralled and so "'-"J '?""""'"„ !^laUe for the tovrent.al "ht., SOth-aOth of «-*•;;:,, Xons soil of Virginia mto :j„s which fell, oonvertn^g 1 uea; ^^^^^ , ^ , nnagmire whieh seen.od to have ,„„;„„ i,,e soaked Z 30th, was lost to the "f^'Z.U.s well as lahor on enr- . Wiery to eordnroy ^ ^^^^l^.., the iighti"g ,>rehnn- fiehl.worVs. On the ..1st o^ .n.nnphantly. ; Five Forks winch atte-^_^,^^.,^ ., ,,,, , es La heen nttcrly discon-fitca. .And silence like a l»."lticc can>e To heal the wonnds of Bouna. A After this, the same iiiglit, Colonel Mickey Diinis made a brilliant little ass:iult to feel the enemy. This has often been alluded to as something unusually well done. As de Trobriand records, "Burns [the 'left bower' of the Old Third, in its prime] is just the man to lead such an attack ; a hot head and a good heart, a devil of a tightei-, but nevertheless clear- sighted, judicious, firm in danger" and better under fii-e than anywhere else." He had with him, besides the 73d New York, which comprised tl)e remnants of the original Excel- sior Brigade, the ]2ith New York under Lt.-CoT. Weygant, and the 110th Pennsylvania under Captain-commanding, F. Stewart. In itself this affair was without importance, but it was very important in so far that it demonstrated into what unsurpassable soldiers four years had converted our volunteers. What does McAllister say about all this period in his re- markable diary or "Statement of Service?" Much, and in detail, too much, unquestionably, by far, for this occasion. The night of the lst-2d was the " witches' sabbath " of the artillery, the Walpurgis night of the big guns. Those who heard the crash and roar on that occasion are not likely to for- get it. It was as if thousands of locomotives had gone insane and rivalled each other in making the darkness hideous with every species of howl and clamor of which steam or explosives and iron are capable. The next day broke beautifully; the weather Avas lovely. The spring sun seemed to laugh benignantly as its rays played atnong the developing foliage. Heaven and earth seemed to rejoice together over the Union success. It was a Sunday, and on it the Rebel armies prepared to evacuate their capital, which they had defended so obstinately for three years, and Peters- burg, which had held Grant in check for over ten months. It was a soit of poetical justice that the occupation of these two l)laces fell in a great measure to the negro troops, and that those who had despised the black, and denied to him the rights of a man, should suffer this last and supreme humiliation. To those whose criticise closely the movements of war, it has always been a matter of very great surprise that Lee was „.as allowea to get oft, -"^ ' ; ; ' ^„ „ j,,,,,,-,, mil-m.vy cnl.cs 1 of Leo, .s.Utoa l.y tin- - ° V'^^,, ,,,„« to ccstit.ue . que. vefc-s to it in InnS-'^S" "'"'' "'I™ ,.„ „„ ,„cn living wl» conUl ion which ■oqni.cs .n "■«« « ; " ^ j' „„„„„ ,„ io so, but tho li:^^;:^ 0^:1"- ---■'- -'■'"-^^"""^"' the old Thi.-a, with wluoh h. ■ •;^;; , ^^ f,3t as they cont.l, ,othi„g .0 ao except to 1^^ " ; .; „„, ,,« labovs of vepan- ,cn.ite the i„tevr„,,t,ons o th a^ y ^^^^^.^^^^^^ j,^_. ^,,^ i„g' Vviage^ «-l ""V"1, ",tv In.oi moved even front vvth ,in,„v ana trains. The mlantij ^^^ ^„ look e a^'ahy, -d although ^----t ^ ^ ,,,^„__,,„ .,„,.,- down somewhat with con^em f ; 1 «" t^ ^^ ^^^„^ „„„_ „,ashevs," the " f'">'--"°W':\Liv assumption. If the cap- thcyhaa little «>use o <^,'"="'',° ,,^,,,,T alone, that arm wouU nreof Lee had depended upon t, a- y ^,^^^^, ^.^^^,.^„, „„,,a ,,„veVen speedily taught "owhtt ^^^ ^__^^ ^.^^^ „„,,j,, ,.„,. i,. They were about to b. 1 ^^^ ^^ Jespevauon, 'vhen even thciv stubborn souls, " . "^-^ » ^^,„^ a,^„,« aside, re- :Ld as soon as the cum-ns o^^^ ' e^ ^^_^^_,^^, ^ „„,,. voaliugthe presence o ''«=! "j^^^, ,^.„^ ,yt bitterly the mjust.ce ,,vs, >nost patient and e those i)eople." It would have saved the country a great deal of trouble if he had been allowed to do so. The war virtually ended with the surrender of Lee. Every succeeding shot was nothing more than the distant and dying echoes of the thunderbolt which burst between the Appomattox and the James. Then, as when the clouds first gathered, the rattle of the Third Corps musketry, and the roar of their guns, blent with the awful uproar which ushered in and Avhich terminated the great American Conflict. Oh, glorious body of heroes ! how grateful the duty of commemorating your achieve- ments, which demonstrated in fire *and attested in blood the truth of your claim of having ever been "FlKST IN ATTACK, LaST IN KETKKAT, TiiiiM) oxi.v IN Name!" 13 NOTES. Note I. — "]\Iiij.-Gen. Andrew Atkinson Humi)lireys, who took com- mand of tbe conihined Second-Tliird Corps on the 26lh of NovcMuber, 1864, suoceeding llaneock, was a pt'rfoct contrast to tlie latter [as modest as Hancock was superb, even more calmly intrepid and surpassing in abil- ity]. Gen. de Trobriand speaks of him as having especially loomed up grandly at Fredericksburg and at Gettysburg, where, in the'latler battle, he behaved magnificently under circumstances particularly critical, in command of the Second Division of "the Old Third Corps as we under- stand it." Immediately afterward Meade selected him as his chief-of- staff, a position more useful than brilliant [in which he did an immense deal of strikingly tine work, for which his superiors as strikingly re- frained from giving liim any credit]. The command of an army corps brought out far better his grand qualities as a soldier, and if it was an advantage for him to have such a body of troops under his orders, it was for them a piece of good luck to have him as their chief. "Humphreys bore little resemblance to his predecessor, Hancock. Physically lie was rather short than tall ; rather thin than fleshy. His head was that of a thinker and of a worker. Habits of observation had developed in his face the impress of a natural sagacity, of which the expression seasoned his language when he spoke, his silence when he listened. His manners were simple, attractive and without the slightest shade of affectation. No person in his position ever thought less of ele- vating himself other than by services. Thus in his conversation, free from useless words, every one felt that he kept back within himself far more than he spoke out. He was an engineer oflicer of the highest merit [and as was said of one of the greatest generals who ever counnanded armies, he was the gentlest of men in society, with all the fabulous character- istics of the lion in the field]. "As a corps commander the neatness of his ideas and the clearness of his perception were powerfully augmented by an imperturbable self command under fire. His calm braver}^ and utter unconsciousness of danger gave him, under every circumstance, the complete exercise of his capacity. The onlj' thing which put him out was the failure to exe- cute an order or a blunder involving dangerous consequences during an action. Then a tempest arose in him more violent since it was ordinarily under perfect control. To give it vent he resorted to flaming soliloquies, in which all the known and unknown possiliilities of the English language burst forth like liombs. Having thus given vent to his feelings, manifestly relieved, he resumed his habitual calm — the air became serene again, the tornado had spent itself." Note II. — " Orders were given to hold this line, if possible, until night. Fortunately, General Grant did not presa Iiis /\ i(^ his hand." Note V. — In regard to the method by which Grant achieved suc- cess, the "Blood Bath" of tlie Wilderness evolved a cumnuniication that is tlnis alluded to and quoted in the U. S. Army and Aari/ Journal, of New Yorlv, Saturdaj'. 13th August, 1864 : "A very intelligent correspondent [J. W. de P.] closes a private letter with the following striliing words : [JI^"] ' The war will Urminate as the poor won ndcd soldier satrd ]iis comrades from beiiajbloirn iiji by a mine. He craioled bleeding over the passage, and soaked (he powder with his blood. We Nortlterners will soak the South into iitcombiistion with our blood, and swarm thein out as sand-flies sicarm out a light ! [.^^] " 'Still o'er their drowning bodies press New victims, quick and numberless.' " In another article, published in the TT. S. Army and Nary Journal, Saturday, 1st October, 1864, the writer indicated exactly how those who came up towards the eleventh hour were going to harvest the rewards and realize the words recorded by the Apostle John ; "One soweth and another reapeth" — " other men laboured, and ye are entered into their labours." Hard lines these, but "inevitable law" in human'aflfairs. 1^ In this article a parallel was instituted, to show how credit ordinarily \ inured to certain men without much labor to themselves, whereas others [t ■ had worked hard to accomplish a result which appeared to the world to be solely due to last comers. t^~"To take a very plain-faced analogy, any person who has ever cut down and dug out a big hickory tree can form some idea of the ef- fects of the decisive chop, or blow. To arrive at the proper juncture for that chop, how much had previou.sly to be done ! First, the tools had to be prepared and the axes ground ; then, the earth had to l)e dug away around the tree and cleared from the lateral roots, and these roots cut ; afterwards, the base of the tree had to be undeiniined, to get at the tap- root. Then, finally, when the tap-root luul been laitl Itare, and a deep chip hewn into it, a single blow of the axe decided the fall of the tree." "This [* * *] brings us to the moral of the last cut in the tap-root of a hickory-tree, which we have used in illustration. Generals, who rise to superior command towards the end of a protracted Avar, are able, not through their own superiority, but by the hydraulic pressure of cir- cumstances, to condense, as it were, 'years' into montJis, into weeks; aye, even into days. And whj^ ? Because — heie our hickory tree simile holds out : First, Some general — killed, perhaps, or, more unfortunate, super- seded — organized, disciplined and moi-alized (if there is such a word in the sense of having imparted morale to an army) the forces which, as vete- rans, came into play, like Wellington's peninsular heroes and Blucher's Silesian fire-eaters in the day and valley of decision. This corresponds to the selection and preparation of the tree-feller's tools. Second, Here and there strong places were taken, in this or that direction ; a corps was cut off or captured ; here and there a victory was won. Alas! how many who pilayed jiarfs eqiiiv(deni io cutting off minor roots Jiarebecn, in ovr irar, .subsequently placed in jio.sifions below their merits. 'Third, At length, a Grant or a Sherman, thanks to the operations of the cruel but inevitable law which seems to I'ule the rise and course of all life, has reached the tap- roots of the enemy's strength and sustentation, and, as it appears to the un- reflecting masses, achieves a Waterloo. It is a Waterloo, and will deservedly 013 708 906 3 16 go down to posterity as a Waterloo ; but a Waterloo is only the last chop on the tap-root. That most able military traitor, Utah Jolmston, re- marked : 'Success is the test of merit; a hard but a just rule of judg- ment.' He was right, man-ward ; but God-ward stands tlie antithesis. ' Who liath despised the day of small things,' the co-operation ol' whieli enabled a leader to condense years into months, and months inio weeks, and weeks into days V According to the unreflecting decision of ordinary thinkers, it is the pomp and circiunstance, the tisibh' power which de- termines events ; but the reflecting man remembers that it was the shrewdness of the shepherd's boy which [showed tlie way across the Alps to Francis I., and] brought Blucher in time to Waterloo, the in- telligence of the miller's lad which [piloted Charles V. to victory at Muhlberg and] guided Frederic the Great to Catholisch Hennersdorf, where he [Frederic] conden.sed months into weeks and weeks into days. Had the English critic thought about all these things, or dug down a large hickory tree, he would not have written his paragraph on 'condens- ation.' When our people make up their strings of jewels, though Grant and Sherman occupy the centres of honor, other glorious brilliants will shine with equal [if not even far, far greater] lustre, as the truth be- comes manifest with time, though of less weight, upon the white bosoms of Columbia and Liberty." Since 1848, I have nuide a great many military suggestions and pre- dictions, and expressed a numl)er of opinions, all in print, as of date, and not one has proved fallacious, except my judgment of Sherman, one very grand error, shown to be so by Geoige A. Thomas, in a memorable conver- sation, in wiiich that great and good man talked — to use the words of an eye and ear witness — as if he was leaving a record behind him like the tablets Hannibal aftixed in the Temple of Juno on the Bay of Tarentum, which served as basis for the veracious history of Polyl)ius, concerning the campaigns in Italy of the greatest captain of all times. Gen. John A. Logan's portraiture of Geouge H. Thomas is truth. Thomas "brought no peculiar trait into stronger relief than another, but blended them all in one harmonious whole. If there was any exception to thi.s, any feature that predominated over otliers, it was the power of his will, especial!}' its power over himself — self-control. And this, united with his uniform urbanity, was doubtless the secret of that facility with which he acquired control over the troops under kin command, irlioiteemcd to ohei/, not more /jecanse duty comjxJlAXi tlwia tlmn htcmiKe then '"''<'? f" <'-''t'- cuie theorderii of their (/eneral. It was the .secret of that power he possessed of instilling into his men his own indomitable and deliberate courage that won him the sobriquet of 'The Kockof Chicamauga' * * * A'« taint of sordid selfshue.is, nt) miserable caprices, no stain of dishonor ever soiled his fair escutcheon. His name will go down to poslavhy trithout a /jlot ujMU his rh(traeler as a soldier, a i)atriot, or a gentleman. Enri/ andjea- lousy will seek in rain for a Jtatc or defect ujion which to hang a doubt or fix a criticism." Note VI. — Grant, who was cruelly severe on Warren for delaying his march on account of ditlicully in bridging Gravelly Rvni, night of March 30th, seems to have been utterly blind to his delay and errors on the 7th April, p. m., when the Api)omattox, far less deep and dangerous, should have been instantly bridged or forded. J. WATTS DE PEYSTER, Buev. Maj. Gen., S. N. Y. First Honorary Member Third Army Ci'rps Union, &c. &c. &c. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 013 708 906 3 p6Rmalipe« pH8^